Fancy niqab-tv?

Hans Rustad

Den egyp­tiske revo­lu­sjon til­la­ter mange å rea­li­sere sine fan­ta­sier, sær­lig hvis de går i reli­giøs ret­ning. Abou Islam Abdal­lah var pro­vo­sert over kvin­ne­lige pro­gram­le­dere, han drømte om en kanal med kvin­ner kledt i niqab. Det kan synes som en selv­mot­si­gelse: tv og full til­dek­king, det kan nær­mest virke litt kinky.

Den 20. juli ble drøm­men rea­li­tet: alle ansatte er kvin­ner og alle er i niqab.

Sala­fis­tene jub­ler. De ønsker seg kulturministeren.

Of the dozens of Isla­mic TV chann­els alre­ady fran­ti­cally com­pe­ting to attract reli­gious belie­vers put off by cable broad­cas­ters’ wigg­ling hips, not one had pre­viously dared to think of an idea as tho­rough and thought-out as this one. Abou Islam Abdal­lah has obviously had a divine illu­mi­na­tion.
For years, the only pro­blem was that the niqab was ban­ned from Egyp­tian TV scre­ens by the Rais him­self: Hosni Muba­rak. Abou Islam had to put his dreams of glory on the back­bur­ner; and while he waited, he laun­ched a more modest Isla­mic tele­vi­sion sta­tion, Ummah TV, pre­sented only by men with thick beards.

One mor­ning in January 2011, how­e­ver, came the revo­lu­tion: a god­send. Sud­denly Sala­fis, pre­viously bul­lied by the iron fist of the pre­vious regime, could now express their beliefs and their way of dres­sing; they could even think about crea­ting their own poli­ti­cal par­ties to espouse the prac­tice of Sha­ria law and create an Isla­mist state.

Abou Islam knew that his time had come, and in the space of a few mon­ths, he had recruited 30 pre­sen­ters, who would only show their eyes. The entire team would be made up exclu­sively of women: from tech­ni­ci­ans to pre­sen­ters, jour­na­lists to direc­tors.
The result, slated to be broad­cast for the first time on July 20, the first day of Rama­dan, has sur­passed expecta­tions: all male pre­sence will be eli­mi­nated. If a woman appears on screen not entirely covered by the veil, her face will be cen­so­red and the main aim of the pro­gram­mers will be to pro­mote the niqab and to respond to the issue of female adultery.

It’s a pro­ject that com­bats discri­mi­na­tion,” affirms the direc­tor, Sheyka Safaa Rifa’i. “Because women who wear the full face veil are being exclu­ded from the media.”

Bet­ter suited for radio?
In the Egyp­tian media, which is cur­rently prepa­ring its Rama­dan broad­cas­ting sche­dule - mainly fil­led with che­esy soap ope­ras - con­s­ter­na­tion and dis­be­lief pre­vail, espec­ially as the news of the pro­ject came in the wake of the arrest of the owner of an ori­en­tal dance tele­vi­sion channel.

I think the con­cept is more appro­priate for radio,” says Mona Sal­man, an Egyp­tian anchor for Al Jaze­era. But across the industry, no one can ignore that the emer­gence of a “100% niqab” TV sta­tion demon­stra­tes that the Sala­fis are succe­e­ding in their demands at both the poli­ti­cal and judi­cial level.
A few mon­ths ago, they were seen as gatecrashers, una­f­raid of ridi­cule but not orga­nized enough to trans­form their ideas into poli­cies. But since their unex­pec­ted break­through in the legis­la­tive elections in January, gar­ne­ring a quar­ter of the seats of Par­lia­ment, their demands are becoming more and more pressing.

Wit­hin the con­sti­tu­ent assem­bly, they are expli­citly cal­ling for the modi­fi­ca­tion of Article 2 of the 1971 Con­sti­tu­tion, which out­lines that “the prin­cip­les of Sha­ria are the main sources of legis­la­tion.” The replace­ment of “the prin­cip­les of Sha­ria” with “Sha­ria” implies a pos­sible intro­duc­tion of Isla­mic punish­ments: an unaccep­table demand for the other poli­ti­cal parties.

When they are not cam­paig­ning in favor of the right to have a full beard in the police or on Egyp­tair, or for the reform of divorce and family law, some Sala­fis are devo­ting them­sel­ves to acti­vities that are pro­vo­king the worst fears.
Out­side of the city, there has been an emer­gence of “moral police” bri­ga­des, who are seeking to impose segre­ga­tion of sexes on buses, in hairdres­sers and uni­ver­sities. On the beaches of the Medi­ter­ranean, pamph­lets have been han­ded out against music.

On June 25, a 20-year-old man was stab­bed to death by extre­mists while he was walking with his girl­fri­end in a Suez park. People also point to the death of a musi­cian attacked while lea­ving a wed­ding by men who pre­sented them­sel­ves as Salafis.

Are the Sala­fis, who are set­ting their sights on the future Mini­s­try of Hig­her Edu­ca­tion, moving towards open con­flict with the Mus­lim Brot­her­hood, who are in turn wor­ried about anta­go­ni­zing libe­rals? The more radi­cal sup­por­ters could in any case cause an explo­sion of the Salafi move­ment, between poli­ti­cal lea­ders, ready to make con­ces­sions on ideo­logy in order to assure a part of power, and more hard­line militants.

NIQAB ON AIR: A NEW EGYPTIAN TV STATION OF ONLY FULLY-VEILED WOMEN
Salafi sheik Abou Islam Abdal­lah had a dream: a tele­vi­sion channel run only by women wea­ring the full-face veil. He would have to wait years, and the fall of the Muba­rak regime, to see the all-niqab network launch this week for the first time.


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